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Date: 2025-01-15 Page is: DBtxt001.php txt00001279 |
Environment and Society |
COMMENTARY The importance of this piece is that it highlights a big failure of my generation ... perhaps best described as the recently retired ... to actually do very much of importance. We were engaged in social activism with civil rights, women's right, the Vietnam peace movement. anti-apartheid and so forth but we failed subsequently to get engaged with the takeover of the planet by the corporate agenda and its greed for profit at any price.
This piece does not motivate in the way the new Occupy Movement is energizing not only the young core and organizers, but a whole ecosystem of people of many ages and backgrounds, all of whom 'get it' and do not feel the need to put up with the socio-economic stupidity of modern society's leadership any more.
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The call for a planetary patriotism Environmental historian Angus Wright calls for planetary patriotism and collective action in the face of climate change. IMAGE The effects of climate change can already be seen today: 'We're in deep trouble, ecologically and culturally, as we try to face up to unprecedented planetary problems in a society in denial' [GALLO/GETTY] Angus Wright has a way of saying things we may not want to hear in a way that's hard to ignore. An example: During a meeting of environmentalists about shaping the public conversation on our most pressing ecological crises, folks were wrestling with how to present an honest analysis in accessible language. We needed to figure out how to talk about the bad news and the need for radical responses, without turning people off. During the discussion about the effects of climate change, Wright offered a simple suggestion for a slogan: 'No more water, the fire next time'. Those words from a black spiritual, made famous by James Baldwin's borrowing for his 1963 book The Fire Next Time, are usually invoked metaphorically. Wright was suggesting that we might want to consider the phrase literally. After a summer of drought and forest fires in Texas where I live, Wright's comment reminded me that climate disruption isn't part of some science-fiction future, but is unfolding around us in ways that are both complex and hard to predict, but devastating simple: We're in deep trouble, ecologically and culturally, as we try to face up to unprecedented planetary problems in a society in denial. Wright is one of our most astute observers of these troubles. His willingness to face these issues, and his ability to grasp the interplay of complex systems, is no surprise to readers of his book The Death of Ramon Gonzalez: The Modern Agricultural Dilemma, first published in 1990 and revised for a 2005 edition. Looking at one region in Mexico, Wright explains how political and economic power, combined with the arrogance of experts who believe they have all the answers, have radically changed people, communities and land - mostly for the worse. Though Wright speaks bluntly about these grim realities, he hasn't given up trying to change the trajectory of a society that so often denies or minimises the threat. A retired professor of environmental studies at California State University, Sacramento, Wright is the chair of the board of The Land Institute, which is committed to the research and organising necessary for a truly sustainable agriculture. His writing also focuses on those issues - he is co-author of To Inherit the Earth: The Landless Movement in the Struggle for a New Brazil (with Wendy Wolford) and Nature's Matrix: Linking Agriculture, Conservation, and Food Sovereignty (with Ivette Perfecto and John Vandermeer). Because Wright has a knack for presenting complex ideas in plain language, I asked him to respond to some crucial questions about how to understand our predicament and options. Can we face reality honestly without feeling overwhelmed? Wright suggests we can. Robert Jensen: Your invocation of 'the fire next time', with its Biblical roots, suggests a moral warning and the potential catastrophe if we are not up to the moral task. Before we get to questions of politics and science, what do you think is the right moral framework for understanding the ecological crises? Angus Wright: There certainly is a moral question, but I think we in the environmental movement have wasted a lot of time dealing with it at the wrong level. I get frustrated with the deep tendency of so many Americans to be more worried about the task of saving their souls rather than solving the problem. I am not as interested in the purity of intention or personal practice as I am concerned about correctly identifying the nature of problems and getting to work in an organised way to solve them.RJ: What are the two or three most important things we need to understand about humans, psychologically and politically, if we are to avoid that destruction? AW:Humans are capable of immense creativity and sacrifice, which has been demonstrated in crisis situations such as wars, famines, migrations and in the building and defence of homes and communities. In my work, I have been frequently reminded of the incredible sacrifices Mexican immigrants make to earn a little money to send back to their families over years, sacrifices that have both an individual and a community aspect. Many of us know how hard and how creatively our parents and ancestors worked to provide us with the lives we now take for granted. Of course, such effort can have negative as well as positive aspects - for example, the creation of the majority European culture of the Americas at the expense of Native Americans and Africans. People are also capable of stunning complacency, greed, and divisiveness.IMAGE Extreme weather is one example of the effects of climate change we are already seeing today [GALLO/GETTY] RJ: If we have a considerable body of knowledge concerning the seriousness of the ecological crises and we have the capacity to respond to threats, what are the key impediments to change? Is the problem in the political leadership of recent decades? The economic system? Something we can't yet identify? AW: One problem is an economic system that impels each company within it to pursue growth - each company must seek new investment funds by demonstrating greater growth potential than its competitors. Another problem is a political system that is so heavily corrupted by corporate cash, exacerbated by the absurd legal fiction that a corporation is a person with constitutional rights to free speech.RJ: You said the solutions aren't going to be individual. But how do you evaluate the efforts of people who focus on their everyday lives? That can range from being diligent about recycling, to buying 'green', to biking to work, to planting a vegetable garden. If we don't naively believe those things can solve all our problems, are they worth doing? AW:Our most important problems can only be solved by collective action - new policies and laws taken by government. That requires that we act, above all, as citizens. I have watched over the past 40 years as nearly every important institution in our society has gradually shifted to encouraging us to see ourselves as individuals and consumers as opposed to group participants and citizens. We are all aware of this in advertising, but it has also become a powerful trend in education and in government itself. We are encouraged to believe that we can bring the changes we need by exercising our 'consumer vote' in the marketplace more effectively than by exercising our citizenship - not just in voting, but also in public debate, in participating in political parties, in the exercise of our professional judgment, in educating our children, in participation in labour unions and professional associations, in speaking out in our communities.RJ: In my experience, academics tend to focus on narrow questions they think they can answer. You seem to gravitate toward big questions that defy definitive conclusions. I wonder if that's because of your training and teaching - you're a historian who taught environmental studies. We might say that the object of your inquiry has been everything that happened before today, and the interconnectedness of everything happening today. What lessons have you learned about intellectual life from your career? AW: When Wes Jackson (president of The Land Institute) recruited me to help him create an environmental studies programme at Cal State-Sacramento, I was the all-purpose humanities and social science person in a small core faculty. I learned all I could from Wes about biology and genetics, and from other colleagues about oil and mineral depletion, nuclear power, city and regional planning, environmental law. It was a wonderful kind of second graduate school experience that lasted through an entire career.RJ: Thinking about that need for clarity, one last question: As an environmentalist, you can't ignore the stark reality of the data about our ecological crises. As a historian, you can't ignore the record of human successes and failures. When you weigh all that up, what advice do you have for how we should face the future? Many people find it hard to face the changes that are likely coming, which I once heard you describe as 'dramatic and potentially highly unpleasant'. Are we facing 'the fire next time'? Is there a way out of the trap we've set for ourselves? AW: I don't know if there is a way out, but we have to try. My own expectations are pessimistic because I don't see enough people having sufficient awareness, understanding and determination to bring about the major changes we need. Robert Jensen is a professor at the School of Journalism at the University of Texas, Austin. His latest book is titled, All My Bones Shake: Seeking a Progressive Path to the Prophetic Voice. The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily represent Al Jazeera's editorial policy. Source: Al Jazeera |
Robert Jensen ... AlJazeera English Opinion
Last Modified: 14 Nov 2011 13:15 |
The text being discussed is available at http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/2011/11/2011111410635906623.html |
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